[{"data":1,"prerenderedAt":-1},["ShallowReactive",2],{"person-5822809":3},{"adult":4,"also_known_as":5,"biography":6,"birthday":7,"deathday":7,"gender":8,"homepage":7,"id":9,"imdb_id":7,"known_for_department":10,"name":11,"place_of_birth":7,"popularity":12,"profile_path":7,"movie_credits":13,"tv_credits":32},false,[],"",null,0,5822809,"Acting","Richard Carter",0.0071,{"cast":14,"crew":31},[15],{"adult":4,"backdrop_path":16,"genre_ids":17,"id":19,"title":20,"original_language":21,"original_title":20,"overview":22,"popularity":23,"poster_path":24,"release_date":25,"softcore":4,"video":4,"vote_average":26,"vote_count":27,"character":28,"credit_id":29,"order":30},"\u002FnbU89468Ze4qijZ89AsXPntznVc.jpg",[18],35,16413,"Panic Mechanic","en","When Hanky Pranky (alias Schucks), star of a candid camera TV show, loses his job to affirmative action, he applies for a job at a stress academy. It´s not long before Schucks discovers his new boss, Jack Paddaman, is as crooked as they come, but it´s too late: the employment contract is signed and sealed.A year passes, and Schucks is no better off. However, his candid camera videos, which poke fun at all sectors of post-1994 South Africa, prove a big hit with stressed-out government ministers. When the president asks Paddaman to make a movie to benefit street children, Schucks and his pals do all the hard work while Paddaman plans how he can get hold of the profits from the video sales. Add a scatterbrained secretary, a lovelorn traffic cop and a cunning street child and you have a roll-in-the aisles comedy with a distinctly South African flavour.",0.1834,"\u002F3ImRIZOFKeamXuV4MfOTkKQAyqE.jpg","1996-11-29",5.7,3,"Camp Chap","691b34a9f85e680126175e8a",26,[],{"cast":33,"crew":34},[],[]]